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HISTORY
AND SCOPE
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Electrical
and Computer Engineering (ECE) Professors
Allen Taflove and Alan
Sahakian began Design Competition twelve years ago as a small
design project for the members of Eta
Kappa Nu, the electrical engineering honor society. Under Professor
Taflove's direction, Design Competition has grown from its modest
beginnings into a highly successful robotics competition that involves
many McCormick
students.
Every
year, the scope of the competition has increased as more students
get involved and the
competition itself becomes more technically challenging for both
the competitors and the DC Executive
Board.
Last
year's design Competition, DC
2002, was the largest and most successful Design Competition
to date, attracting about 125 student competitors and more than
600 spectators from the University and its surrounding communities.
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DESIGN COMPETITIONS |
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HANDS
- ON EXPERIENCE FOR STUDENTS
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Design
Competition gives students an excellent opportunity to use the engineering
design skills and creativity that they are developing during their
undergraduate education. It is truly a concrete design experience
that requires real-world thinking which can sometimes be overlooked
in a strictly classroom environment.
The competition is an open-ended problem to which competitors devise
their own strategy and implement their robotic design within the
bounds of certain basic rules. Because the nature of the competition
is often interdisciplinary, teams are usually comprised of students
from several engineering disciplines working together. The experience
of working with others with different backgrounds offers students
a glimpse of what they can expect throughout their careers.
Innovation
is often the key element behind the most successful DC competitors.
DC encourages students to be innovative in all aspects of the competition:
basic game strategy, robot design, and competition rules and course
design (Executive Board).
Successful innovative strategies, for instance, have varied tremendously
over the year from simple mechanical devices to complex programming
of the agents based on anticipation of other team's strategies.
Student
members of the Executive Board
also benefit greatly from the DC experience but in a somewhat different
way than the competitors do. The Board's main responsibility is
the overall management of the competition. While each member performs
many tasks necessary during the yearlong planning required for the
implementation of the competition, members are primarily responsible
for a specific part of competition. These areas include overall
management, finance, course construction and rules direction, public
relations, team management, logistics and event planning, and Internet
development. Being part of the Executive Board is a great experience
in managing a project of considerable magnitude.
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COMMUNITY
OUTREACH
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Design Competition, which occurs as the culmination
of McCormick
Engineers Week in May, is an outdoor spectacle that many members
of the university and the surrounding communities have enjoyed attending.
In
fact many of last year's spectators were local junior high and high
school students who were given an exciting glimpse into the fun
and creativity involved in engineering design. This year we hope
to do an even better job in reaching out to our local schools.
In
order to entice more young students to come and watch Design Competition,
this year we hope to have a free raffle for the youngsters in which
they can win educational and science-oriented prizes. In addition,
we offered for the 2nd time, a total of $1000 in scholarship to
deserving graduating high school students.
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BENEFTS
OF SPONSORSHIP
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Sponsors
benefit from Design Competition via exposure to many of McCormick's
brightest students. As in our past Design Competitions, a table
will be provided to allow company personnel to interact with McCormick
students and other attendees during the day of the competition.
The sponsor will also gain exposure via company logos placed on
the course, on the competitors T-shirts, and on the official DC
2002 web page. In addition to exposure, sponsors will also receive
a resume book of the competitors.
We
believe this will help in your recruiting efforts at Northwestern.
By contributing $5000 to DC 2002, the sponsor can become a Gold
Sponsor. In addition to the exposure provided to all donors, Gold
Sponsors will be invited
to a preview reception and breakfast the morning of the competition,
where they will the McCormick School of Engineering and Applied
Science Dean, John
Birge, the members of the student teams and their faculty advisors,
and the members of the DC 2002 Executive
Board.
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